rsync shooting itself in the foot by setting permission 000 on directory

During a backup of a large directory from a Windows XP machine to a
Linux machine, rsync sets permissions on a directory to 000. This
effectively prevents it from writing the subdirectories and files to it.

The user my rsync script runs as on the winbox does have access to these
files, so even when preserving permissions, it should be accessible for
the rsync user on the target machine. I could probably work around this
by not using the --perms option and setting an umask at the receiving
end, but it's not very elegant.

Re: rsync shooting itself in the foot by setting permission 000 on directory

Steven Mocking wrote:
[color=blue]
> During a backup of a large directory from a Windows XP machine to a
> Linux machine, rsync sets permissions on a directory to 000. This
> effectively prevents it from writing the subdirectories and files to it.
>
> The user my rsync script runs as on the winbox does have access to these
> files, so even when preserving permissions, it should be accessible for
> the rsync user on the target machine. I could probably work around this
> by not using the --perms option and setting an umask at the receiving
> end, but it's not very elegant.
>
> Any other ideas? Is this even a feature?[/color]

Rsync runs extremely poorly on Windows machines, in my experience. I'd
suggest you make sure to use "rsync -avvH" to do a bit of testing, but
even better do a Samba mount of the directory on the Linux machine, and
rsync *THAT* to your local Linux box. And look into using "rsnapshot"
to make it a bit safer and faster.